Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Poor in Spirit


This past Thursday after our wonderful fourth of July celebrations, we were told to wake up at 6am and meet our director. In our staff meetings, we had discussed what was about to take place: a poverty simulation. Most of the students roll out of bed close to 6am, but they are very conscious to not be late as our director said that there would be consequences if they were late. As student staff, I was given the option of participating with the students, and because I knew what a great experience it was, I decided to take part. Tom, our director, gave out the guidelines of the simulation. He collected all of our phones and wallets and passed out twenty dollars of fake money, which we had “earned” from our day job and instructed everyone to grab their Bible, journal, and three personal items, except for two people who were chosen to be homeless—I was one of those two. Being homeless meant that you didn’t make any wages, and you were not allowed any personal possessions. All I carried with me was my ID, TAP pass for the buses, Bible, and journal. Before the poverty simulation had begun, I had decided to go the ministry sites with the teams, one on Thursday and the other on Friday. However, I had not anticipated what a burden I would soon become for them.

As a homeless person, though I had no earnings of my own, I still had to take the bus and pay Tom for transportation. Every time we got in a train, bus, or car, we had to pay a dollar. Just by me joining a team, I was racking up my own debt and placing it on other’s shoulders. It was also protocol that we had to sign up for meals in advance. In the morning, each team would decide how many lunches and dinners they would buy. Each meal cost $8. Lunches could be shared, but dinner could not. Before I knew it, one of the teams had already paid for a dinner for me, even though I said that I would be fine not eating. Once again, I felt like I owe someone else something. I hated the idea that I was a burden to someone and could not provide for myself. I love my friends for being so giving and not thinking anything of providing for me, but I wanted to be able to pay them back. I didn’t want to be dependent.

That day, we left early for the ministry site at the Salvation Army in Compton (a place that I hold especially dear in my heart) because the students said that the kids there were served breakfast, and they hoped that perhaps the teachers would offer some to us as well. Alas, they did not. We passed out breakfast and watched children eat their donuts, several of them complaining that they did not like these donuts and eventually wasting them. The ministry that we did was great, but it became hard to focus on the kids when thoughts kept persisting in the back of my head. I was tired from being woken up early and hungry from the lack of breakfast, and who knows how filling lunch is going to be? Eventually, it came time for lunch, and this is when the questions started to come. Several of the kids asked where our lunches were, and we had to respond that we didn’t have time to pack them (as we were not allowed to tell people that we were in a poverty simulation). Some of them suggested that we go get some Chinese from across the street to which we replied that we had no money. Another said that we should order a pizza and pay them back tomorrow, which obviously was not an option. Matt and Kelley came back with our own lunch. We had paid for two lunches that included a sandwich, a bag of chips, and a piece of fruit. When I opened the bag for the lunch, I saw that the sandwich was sliced into fifths. Each of us got one fifth of a turkey sandwich and one fifth of a peanut butter and jelly sandwich. It baffled me how quickly those two slivers went into my mouth, and just like that, lunch was finished. The kids around us ate subway sandwiches, hot pockets, and chips, but it did not take long for us to finish our lunch. When I was waiting for the children to get done eating, I saw that one boy didn’t like his crust on his sandwich, so in his baggie was practically half a sandwich that he had torn off. I coveted that sandwich so much. I was appalled that he would be so wasteful while we were eating so little. God reminded me that I do things like that every day, and it is not a common thought for me to think how much I am wasting.

We came back from our ministry site to dinner that was served mission style where we all had to hear a testimony, and we were given the opportunity to pray to receive Christ into our hearts before we were served. Later that night came the next challenge—sleeping. After our dinner and gospel night that we have every Thursday, we went back to Uncle Tom’s Mission to sleep. We scrounged up anything that we thought we could sleep on—tarps, bean bags, cardboard, newspapers from earlier in the day, cushions, and the like. In Tom’s backyard, there is their driveway and the grassy part. However, the grassy part had dog poop on it, and Tom had warned us that on two nights of the week (which he was not sure which two) the sprinklers would turn on and water the grass. The seven girls laid down in a line and covered up with the couple of blankets that we had, and I was on the end. Everyone was tossing, turning, as it is very hard to get comfortable when your hip bones and practically grinding into the ground, and trying to get some sleep. In the middle of the night though, I learned that being on the end had its disadvantages. People in the night would shift, and easily, the blanket would no longer be on me. Most of the warmth that I found was snuggling up to the person next to me. I found myself so quickly being upset. I was upset at the fact that the pavement was so hard, upset at the fact that people were hogging the blanket, and upset at the fact that it was so cold in California during a summer night. This was when God reminded me of the many blessings that I do have, and how I had no place to have this sense of entitlement. He took my mind to Philippians 2 were Paul talks about how Jesus, who is God, could have claimed all of his rights, but he claimed none. He submitted his rights and allowed his Father to bestow any back. If Jesus, who was entitled to all things like respect and a good name, submitted his rights, what right did I have to feel entitled when I in fact have nothing to claim for myself? I asked God to reveal more of my sin to me and to fill me with Him. I began to pray for people who are in this place who are not in a simulation like me, and my joy was increased. Through my momentary afflictions, I was able to empathize with others and pray specific prayers for them as well as submit my rights to God, realizing that it is only by Him that I am not in this position long term.

The next day brought hardships as well, but by this time we were learning how to survive. We became more resourceful as two others and I walked around the neighborhood looking for cardboard boxes and happened upon two couch cushions, but another aspect of the simulation was that our director would occasionally give us “chance cards.” Some of these were positive, but most were negative like losing personal items and such. These cards were symbols of the injustices that the poor face. While we have constants in our lives, the poor often live from day to day, and they may not know what the day may hold for them. To further this lesson, our kitchen had a mysterious “fire” so that we were not able to eat the dinner for which we already paid. In light of the dinner, we heard a talk about the Beatitudes. Is it really truth when Jesus says, “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.”? To be poor in spirit is not something to necessarily strive for, but it is actually our identity in Christ. When Jesus says that we are blessed, it is because we are literally poor without Christ. We are able to fully realize that apart from Christ we can do nothing, and we have nothing. As I come broken to the cross, I am able to embrace the fullness of God’s grace and realize the extent of His sacrifice. It is from this position where I am able to function in His power and rest in the fact that I am purchased into His kingdom. Psalm 31:19 reads, “Oh, how abundant is your goodness, which you stored up for those who fear you and worked for those who take refuge in you, in sight of the children of mankind.” His goodness is stored up for those who take refuge in Him, for those who have nowhere else to go but to Him and find relief. I am to live and give out of His abundance, not my own, but all I have to live on which is Christ.

The final day was perhaps the most impactful days for me. We split up into teams and were set out on a scavenger hunt that included finding lunch to eat, finding 20 cans, interviewing a homeless person, asking for money, visiting an elderly person, etc. As we started, we decided to go to the wealthier part of town to ask for money, thinking that they would perhaps be more generous. On the way, we were able to spot several aluminum cans in various places. Our shame quickly went out the window as we dug through trash can after trash can because we were doing these things to survive and in fear of what consequences might come from our director if we did not complete all of the tasks. All in all, we ate tater tots and popcorn found in a bush, two sandwiches still wrapped found in a trash can, and a leftover meal of bacon and bread from Denny’s found in a trash can. I didn’t even care that I was eating food that was in a trash can. Perhaps, though, the hardest thing to do was to ask for money because that took me getting over my pride. Two others and I sat outside a grocery store asking strangers for their change. I couldn’t believe the lack of respect that people had for us; it was as if they didn’t view us as fellow human beings. We would ask if they had any change right after seeing them put away the money the just used at the grocery store, and they would tell us now. One of the ladies that we asked begrudgingly gave us a dollar. Because we were using a Corona box to carry our cans, she emphatically insisted that we use it for the bus. I couldn’t believe that people would question my motives when I’ve never even had alcohol in my life, but I was quickly reminded by the Lord that I question people’s motives constantly. Instead of giving cheerfully and freely as God has given me, I am often stiff handed (though I am not saying that we should give every time we are asked), but I do know that there are many times when I only give out my abundance if I think their motives are correct.

I say all of these things to show you the identity that you have and must claim in Christ. Be poor in spirit, and look to Christ for His abundance of goodness. Let us put away our pride and depend on Him. Christ saw us exactly as we were in our sin and still gave His life for us. How can we not out of His abundance also freely give?

Luke 24:1-4
Jesus looked up and saw the rich putting their gifts into the offering box, and he saw a poor widow put in two small copper coins. And he said, “Truly, I tell you, this poor widow has put in more than all of them. For they all contributed out of their abundance, but she out of her poverty put in all she had to live on.”

Monday, July 2, 2012

White for Harvest

Jesus said to them, "My food is to do the will of him who sent me and to accomplish his work. Do you not say, 'There are yet four months, then comes the harvest'? Look, I tell you, lift up your eyes, and see that the fields are white for harvest. Already the one who reaps is receiving wages and gathering fruit for eternal life, so that sower and reaper may rejoice together. For here the saying holds true, 'One sows and another reaps.' I sent you to reap that for which you did not labor. Others have labored, and you have entered into their labor."
John 4:34-38

Sometimes, I think that I forget how short life is. In fact, I know this to be true. So many of my thoughts do not dwell on what is happening here and now but on what decisions that will need to be made in the future. All of my thoughts and actions are fueled by what I want to accomplish in a couple of years, and my longing becomes so great for what "joy" lies ahead that I become absent in the present. I'm always looking ahead and hoping for what seems greater on the other side. In high school, it was looking toward college. In college, it is looking toward what I want to do as a career and whom I want to marry. My mind becomes so focused on the future that I am not able to fully engage in what immediately surrounds me. I am the person that Jesus speaks about that says, "There are yet four months," but I am missing the point. In trying to figure out God's plan and hoping that he will show it to me in the next how many ever months, days, weeks, etc., I deprive myself of my life source. My food, my sustenance, is to do the will of him who sent me and accomplish his work. No one would wait four months for food, so why would I push off accomplishing his work? We get so worried about receiving food and what he wants for us from the LORD that we are counterproductive. Jesus says to work now because that is your food. He has already prepared the fields for harvest. Now, go and reap that you may do his will and accomplish his work. I am convicted by the fact that I so often long for sustenance from God and yet lack in working to get it. God has lifted my eyes, though, to see the harvest, and because I have tasted this food, there is no turning back. I must reap and rejoice with the sower. 

Being in LA has allowed me to see even more how white for harvest the fields are. I have experienced firsthand people's souls aching for the gospel to be shared, and I have heard numerous stories from students about conversation after conversation. Lift up your eyes, and see that the fields are white for harvest. This past week, I was able to visit one of the ministry sites where four of the students were working for the week. It was a great time getting to see the students interact with the children and love them with the love of Christ, but perhaps the most impacting part was that I was able to talk and share life with some of the children. I was able to meet several of the children and hear about their lives, and the best part came when I ended up learning a jazz dance from some of the older girls at the site. God so rejuvenated me by allowing me to love one on one people that he created, and I was able to share life for a brief moment to show them that they are loved. This interaction made me realize how sustaining it really is to be able to do the work of the LORD. How refreshing it is to know and feel God sustaining you with his work!

God has provided me with an awesome opportunity to be in LA this summer. Initially, the only reason I came to LA was because they needed staff. I love the inner city and God's heart for the poor, so I decided that I would go. Since being here, as I have shared previously, God has completely grown my heart for the city, and the thought of leaving has been one looming over my head. However, God has also provided another opportunity for me to stay longer in LA! As student staff, I was planning on leaving when the staff turns over the project on July 15th (about halfway through the project), but recently, I found out that I can stay as a student on project. After staff leaves, I have the option to join one of the ministry teams and work one on one with the people of the city. I was so excited when I first heard the option, but I definitely wanted to coat my decision in prayer to make sure that I was staying for the right reasons and not just because all of the students on project are amazing. A couple of days later, I have decided to press on this summer. However, to stay longer means that I have to come up with $2200 more than I initially raised to come as student staff. I am trusting the LORD with my future, and He is so faithful. If God wants me to stay here, then, He will bring the money in for me to stay, and if I am supposed to go home, then, I have peace in God providing that way as well. If you're reading this blog and you're thinking, "Wow, Courtney! That's so awesome! I want to know how I can partner with you in the furthering God's kingdom in the inner city of LA!" then, I can tell you right now how you can do that. If you would like to support me as I hope to stay in LA for the completion of project, you can either send a check made out to "Cru" to
Courtney Bell
1401 Valencia Street
Los Angeles, CA 90015,
or you can go online to https://give.cru.org/give/View/5631521;jsessionid=8DFAA627E5F21B0DC09826A5B10E9089.dss2 and give that way. I am expectant for how God is going to provide and grow my faith in this process. I was just encouraged this morning as I was reading through 1 Chronicles 29 where it reads, "But who am I, and what is my people, that we should be able thus to offer willingly? For all things come from you, and of your own have we given you." I would challenge you that God has blessed you with finances to joyously give them back to Him, and to support Cru's work through Here's Life Inner City on summer project is definitely a worthwhile cause that seeks to see God's work done. So, thanks in advance for your commitment to the LORD!

Pray for:
-staff and students to see their need for the gospel before they can communicate it to others
-students 2nd week of ministry sites
-support to be raised!

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Steps of Faith

God is good to grow people, and He is good to provide opportunities for growth in our dependency. The students on project have been here for about a week, and I can already see how God is at work in my life, in the lives of the students and staff, and in the people of LA. God is so glorified in us stepping out in faith and realizing that God must come through for our plans to work out. Even in this first week, I have been encouraged by this, and it has been so cool to see our project set the precedent for these steps of faith.


On Saturday, as a staff team, we evaluated our finances on project, and we had a deficit. We came to the conclusion that as a project we needed to take time out in our schedule and make phone calls to raise more support and allow people to partner in ministry as we reach LA.To be honest, fear crippled me as I figured out that even though I had raised full support I was still challenged to call five people. I personally had never had to call for support to come in, but it always came in on its own. Nevertheless, on Sunday, we gathered as an entire project and talked about how we can grow in our reliance on the Lord by stepping out in faith. Before we called anyone, we entered into a brief time of prayer where we brought our needs before God and submitted to His sovereignty, and God spoke so loudly encouraging my heart that He would provide every need for us. In our time before the throne, God began speaking names to me, and I obediently wrote them down. There were still nerves, but I had confidence that "my God will meet all [our] needs according to his glorious riches in Christ Jesus" (Phil. 4:19). From there on, I had seen call after call that God had orchestrated perfectly. My very first call was met by a generous donation because God had showed him in scripture that he was to be a cheerful giver, and God also gave him the opportunity to walk in scripture. Praise the Lord for a chance to live out His word! Another call was with an old project friend who was in LA two years ago with me. As I caught up with him about project and LA, he had told me that he was just praying for our project and the students. God made a divine appointment for me to share our situation, and he was overjoyed to be able to partner along with us, knowing the very type of ministry that we are doing this summer. About two hours later, our team reported back to each other, and God had exceeded our goal! Truly He has blessed us that we might be a blessing to others.


I think that one of the biggest things that God is teaching me is that I live in a world surrounded by lies, and so often, I believe the lies that they feed me. In fact, it sometimes becomes such a problem that I will place lies in the thoughts of others about me before I even give them a chance to show me that they do not think that about me. Sound confusing? For example, when we first discussed calling people, my thoughts immediately go to the lies that no one will want to give. They, of course, will be so put off by my calling them, and they will get mad for asking. When I go about life this way, it is so easy to let lies permeate my thoughts, and it becomes harder to distinguish the truth from the lies. But when the lies that I tell myself come against the truth of who God is and what His word says, the sword of the Spirit penetrates until the truth is the only one that prevails. Philippians 4:8, 9 reads, "Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is commendable, if there is any excellence, if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things. What you have learned and received and seen in me--practice these things, and the God of peace will be with you." This is how I am to combat the lies that ring so loudly in my head. If Satan can consume our thoughts with anything besides the truth, the battle is practically lost. I must daily renew and wash over myself with scripture, so the truth may prevail. 


I have learned so much, and I am thankful that God is growing me closer to Him while I am here. Everyone on our team has felt so much confirmation that we are where we are supposed to be, and it is no different with me. Thank you guys for your time and your prayers, I hope you will celebrate the work that God is doing here and glorify His name above all others!


Pray for:
-continued team unity
-ministry sites starting next week
-hearts of vulnerability
-greater commitment to loving Christ

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Back in LA!

Wow! It has been a whirlwind since I have gotten to LA! I got in last Thursday night around midnight LA time, and I am still trying to catch up on sleep. However, that does not mean by any measure that I have not had an awesome time so far!


Right now, the only people here are the staff. Our team consists of two couples (one from LA and one from Minneapolis), two other married staff members (both from the LA area), and me. It has been a great time of bonding as a staff team as well as preparing for our students' arrivals on Friday. Already, God has taught me so much! As a team, we have walked through Fresh Encounters by Daniel Henderson which deals with our need for prayer and how often we don't understand how to pray. It walks through a biblical basis for corporate prayer and gives some practical advice for what it should look like. (For all of you MCF readers, we need to get a prayer night going. This study would be awesome to do together as a body or a small group!) God is so worthy to be sought, and yet, we come to him with other motives. We so often seek His hand without stopping to seek His face first. More and more, God is showing me how my delight is to be in Him, and the even cooler thing is that His delight is in me. Through my justification by Jesus Christ, I do not have to work to earn righteousness, but it is accredited to me. That means that the extent of my commitment or righteousness is not based upon how much I surrender or how much I don't sin, but those acts flow out of the joy in knowing the God sees me as righteous before Him. What a beautiful truth! I am still trying to apply this to my heart and understand fully what this means, but I know that there is so much freedom in that. Not freedom in the sense that I am only free from sin because justification is not exclusively about freedom. It is about God looking on us and saying, "You are good because of my Son." Just bask in that for a while. Tell God how grateful you are for the joy that He supplies.


I look forward to the rest of my time in LA, and I am excited for the students to come on Friday. I am so expectant for God to work in their lives because I have seen Him do the same revelation in me. Already the memories and revelations that God gave me two years ago are flooding back into my life. God is enlarging my heart for this city, and right now, I do not know what He will do with it. However, I wait eagerly serving Him with joy until He decides to show me His plan. He is good!


Forever His,
Courtney


Pray for:
-adjusting to the time change
-staff team unity
-students' arrivals
-support for students that has yet to be raised

Monday, June 4, 2012

Spiritual Poverty

This Thursday, I hop on a plane and travel to Los Angeles, California for the third time in my life. Two years ago, I went to LA on a spring break trip, and I knew that my work was not finished there. Soon after, God provided the way for me to go back for eight weeks that summer on a summer project through Cru. I can in no way express how much that experience has changed my outlook and shaped my Christian faith, but I expect no less as I go back again. Before I went to LA for the first time, it wasn't as if I was hardhearted toward the poor, but I didn't have much interaction with them. We both went on in our separate, very different worlds. As I grew up in my younger years around DC, I knew that there were plenty of poor people in the city, but my knowledge stopped there until God opened my eyes.


You see, I'm the kind of person who will not be convinced of something unless I see the proof. God, knowing exactly how He created me, used His word to show me what my heart's response should be toward the poor. In my quiet times with the Lord, I began to see how His heart breaks for the downtrodden and how adamant He is about justice. As I was desperate for my heart to be conformed to His, I prayed that God would "break my heart for what breaks His," a line that I often sang in worship but never fulfilled in this area. Scripture after scripture showed me the intense love He has for these people and the intense hatred He has for acts of injustice against them. Through the ministry sites that our team went to, I was able to demonstrate this love through the Holy Spirit working in me. Their faces and names were a constant reminder of God's word, and I found my heart yearning to show compassion and speak truth to them. However, it was not until our team went through a poverty simulation where God decided to break my pride. We would go minister to the churches in the inner city, and then, I would go home and feel good about the work we were doing for the Lord. Now, I think it is good to find joy in serving, but this joy came out of pride in myself for fulfilling scriptures. During the poverty simulation, we were stripped of possessions and money and forced to sleep in the parking lot outside of our house, only allowed to come back at certain times. We would walk the streets, attempt to sleep in parks, and visit random shops. It was then that I realized that I had an attitude of superiority about me because as I experienced on a very small level what people go through every day, I realized that my temptations and instincts are not so different from theirs.


This was when God showed me my spiritual wealth. I had read verses talking about the riches of Christ that I have because of my faith in Him, and so often, I want to focus on what I have now. So quickly, I forget that until Christ was in my life, I was spiritually poor. The outward manifestation of my spiritual poverty was clear to see as I went to impoverished neighborhoods. God had shed the final layer of pride, and I came to Him more thankful for how He has made me rich spiritually rather than materially. I began to talk to many of the people that I previously thought inferior to myself, and I realized that they had a much greater grasp on the wealth of Christ at their fingertips. Without Christ, we were in the same boat, but because they experienced that poverty on a daily basis, they understood what it meant to be blessed beyond knowledge in the spiritual. They taught me about this wealth and the joy they have because of Christ.


As I go back to LA, I will be taking a different role. When I went two years ago, I was a student, and this year I am going as a student staff. I will be privileged to lead the students in discipleship, Bible study, and similar things. I will also be able to lead a prayer, social, or outreach team. My prayer is that I come into this trip humbly and allow God to use me in whatever way that He wants, and I pray that He uses my experiences to shape the students' experiences. When I was a student, it was largely the staff who pointed me toward truth about serving the poor and loving them, and because of them, my walk with the Lord is forever changed. It is my prayer that rather than being one woman continuing to do ministry in regards to the poor that I will take the role that points students toward the truth about God's heart for the poor, and in turn, they will take it back to their campuses and cities and begin to show others. The impact is far greater, and I pray that I will get myself out of the way to show others how to walk in it. I look forward eagerly to see what God has planned for this trip. I know that it will not stop after I or the students leave project, but He will grow it and use it for His glory. That is all that I can hope for--to enjoy serving God in light of the truth He has set before me.


Is not this the fast that I choose:
    to loose the bonds of wickedness,
    to undo the straps of the yoke,
to let the oppressed go free,
    and to break every yoke?
Is it not to share your bread with the hungry
    and bring the homeless poor into your house;
when you see the naked, to cover him,
    and not to hide yourself from your own flesh?
Then shall your light break forth like the dawn,
    and your healing shall spring up speedily;
your righteousness shall go before you;
    the glory of the LORD shall be your rear guard.
Isaiah 58:6-8